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I can never resist the urge to bash a biased steroid story. And so I've got to write a little something about the latest horrible steroid story I read through Chicago Now via NJ.com.
The story started out with a New Jersey doctor named Joseph Coalo, who was supplying police officers and firefighters around the NJ area with steroids. Par la suite, Coalo died from heart failure, which Chicago Now referred to as "When that doctor died because of side effects from his own steroid use, people started to take notice."
Ignoring the obvious reference to steroids supposedly doing the doctor in even though roids have never been proven to directly kill anybody, the article went on to describe an episode where two policemen (out of a group of 5) beat a defenseless man; the two cops were later found to be getting prescriptions filled for testosterone and growth hormone.
Obviously these two cops must have incited the beating because they were going through an uncontrollable bout of roid rage, droit?
The article just keeps getting better when it suggests that because the Chicago police department is 40% above the national average on police brutality, it could be attributed to "drug-induced machismo that leads to aggressive behavior." This article does everything short of blaming police brutality on roid rage.
It couldn't be because police deal with violent idiots day in and day out, and they eventually grow so tired of it that they become violent back. There are a host of other factors we could talk about in regards to police brutality as well, but the author of this article, Megan Cottrell, seems to have pinpointed it to steroid usage.
I wonder if Cottrell has any idea what it's like to A) do steroids, or B) spend a job on the Chicago police force?